364
JOHN BOYLE O'REILLY.
Perhaps nothing said in praise of his memory was more in the spirit of eulogy which he would have loved best, because it was eulogy of his country and his countrymen, than these words from the pen of a Protestant clergyman. Rev. H. Price Collier, in the Boston Saturday Evening Gazette:
Many fine poems were written in memory of the dead singer, beautiful tributes of sorrow and praise from his brother and sister poets,—James Whitcomb Riley, Mary E. Blake, John W. O'Keefe, M. J. McNeirny, Louise Imogen Guiney, and a score of others, who had known and loved and owed gratitude for a thousand kindly deeds to this kindliest of men. One of the most touching came anonymously from San Diego, Cal., entitled simply:
AUGUST 10, 1890.
I stirred in my sleep with a sudden fear.
The breath of sorrow seemed very near.
And the sound of weeping; I woke and said,
"Some one is dying, some one is dead."